| Record
Group: |
Burlington
County |
| Subgroup: |
Clerk's Office |
| Series: |
Birth
Certificates of Children of Slaves, 1804-1826 |
| Accession
#: |
1992.046 |
| Series
#: |
CBUCL001 |
| Guide
Date: |
10/1996
(JK) |
| Volume: |
0.1
c.f. [15 items] |
Content
Note | Contents
Legislative
History
The
filing of birth certificates for children of slaves was the direct
result of "An act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery,"
passed by the New Jersey Legislature on 15 February 1804 (P.L. 1804,
chap. CIV, p. 251). This law pronounced every child born to a slave
mother after 4 July 1804 "free" at birth, but bound as
a servant to the owner of the mother until the age of twenty-five
for males and twenty-one for females. Any person entitled by the
law to such bound service was required to file with the county clerk,
within nine months of the birth of the child, a written certificate
containing the name of the slave owner and the name, age and sex
of the child. The clerk, in turn, was directed to record the information
into a special book for this purpose. The penalty for neglecting
to deliver such a certificate was $5, plus an additional $1 for
each month of delinquency.
The law also allowed for the abandonment of such children by the
owners of their mothers at the age of one year. In this case, the
child would become a ward of the local overseers of the poor; the
slave owner was required to file a notification of abandonment with
the county clerk.
Content
Note
The
fifteen birth certificates included in this series were found, bundled
together, among loose papers of the Burlington County Clerk's Office/Court
of Common Pleas transferred to the State Archives in 1992. At the
time of their discovery in 1996, an effort was made to locate the
county clerk's birth book, which is known to have been kept (as
the law directed) from notations on these certificates. The volume
was not found in the clerk's office, however (nor was it listed
in the 1939 WPA survey of the historical records held by the Burlington
County Clerk). The collections of the New Jersey Historical Society,
the Burlington County Historical Society, and Rutgers Special Collections
and University Archives were also searched with no success. It would
appear, therefore, that the manuscripts included in this series
contain the only surviving government record of births of children
of slaves in Burlington County.
It is probably also safe to assume that this series is complete
(i.e., that no certificates are missing), or near-complete, since
the manuscripts were bundled together. There would not have been
a large number of children born to slave mothers in Burlington County
- a largely Quaker, and therefore abolitionist, area. We know from
the certificates that only four pages were used in the county clerk's
"Birth Book A."
The certificates are listed below in order of their receipt by the
county clerk, not by the date of the child's birth.
All of them include references to being recorded in "Birth
Book A" except for the last, which has no recording notation.
While the 1804 law did not require that the mother's name be recorded
in the birth certificate, it frequently was. The father's name,
unfortunately, was not recorded in any of these certificates, although
one (item 6) indicates that the mother was married. |
Contents
| 1. |
Birth
certificate of Edward Eairs, born 13 August 1804, son of an unnamed
slave of Isaac Budd, Northampton Twp., 5 November 1804 [recorded in
Book A, page 1]. |
| 2. |
Birth certificate
of Efamy Harman, born 25 March 1805, daughter of Leah Harman, slave
of Uz Leach, Chester Twp., 27 March 1806 [recorded in Book A, page
1]. |
| 3. |
Birth certificate
of John Prout, born 5 September 1806, son of Abigail, slave of Joseph
Gardiner, no place, no date [recorded in Book A, page 1]. |
| 4. |
Birth certificate
of Jef Hull, born 2 July 1804, and Lewis Hull, born 23 December 1807,
children of an unnamed slave of Charles Hughes, no place, no date
[recorded in Book A, page 2]. |
| 5. |
Birth certificate
of Jude, born 20 January 1808, daughter of an unnamed slave of Cornelius
Thomson, Springfield Twp., no date [recorded in Book A, page 2]. |
| 6. |
Birth certificate
of Chales [sic], born 13 August 1808, son of Susan, a married slave
of Daniel C. Runyan, no place, 25 October 1808 [recorded in Book A,
page 2]. |
| 7. |
Birth certificate
of Jeremiah Hone, born 27 September 1810, son of Claressa, slave of
George Davis, Chester Twp., no date [recorded in Book A, page 2]. |
| 8. |
Birth certificate
of Lot, born 21st of 2nd Mo. 1811, child of an unnamed slave of John
Pancoast, no place, received 14 March 1813 [recorded in Book A, page
2]. |
| 9. |
Birth certificate
of Lem, born 10 October 1813, son of Parmelia, slave of Benjamin Hollinshead,
farmer, Chester Twp., 8 February 1814 [recorded in Book A, page 3]. |
| 10. |
Birth certificate
of Diana, born 9 May 1814, daughter of an unnamed slave of John Cornell,
Nottingham Twp., received 23 May 1815 [recorded in Book A, page 3]. |
| 11. |
Birth certificate
of William, born 17 May 1817, son of Jemima, slave of John S. Lippincott,
Bordentown, 16 February 1818 [recorded in Book A, page 3; this child
is referred to as William Evelman in Lippincott's will, 1828, file
#13812C]. |
| 12. |
Birth certificate
of Lucanda, born 19 December 1816, daughter of an unnamed slave of
Job Mathis, Little Egg Harbour Twp., 8 September 1817 [recorded in
Book A, page 4]. |
| 13. |
Birth certificate
of George Eayres, born 14 January 1807, son of Lydia Eayres, slave
of Isaac Budd, no place, received 18 September 1823 [recorded in Book
A, page 4]. |
| 14. |
Birth certificate
of Emeline, born 15 March 1824, daughter of Fanny Franks, slave of
Nathaniel Fenimore, Springfield Twp., received 28 October 1825 [recorded
in Book A, page 4]. |
| 15. |
Birth certificate
of Charles Sharp, born 2 November 1814 at Bordentown, Chesterfield
Twp., son of Phillis Williams, and Mark [Ashdon?], born 4 May 1817
at Bloomsbury, Nottingham Twp., son of Phillis [Ashdon?], the mothers
slaves late belonging to Nathaniel Shuff, deceased, no place, 25 May
1826 noted on reverse [no reference made to recording; reported by
Aaron O. Shuff, executor; Mark and his mother are mentioned (without
a surname) in Nathaniel Shuff's will, 1824, file #13470C]. |
|